Plain
Marcus Aurelius — The Emperor

Even unreasonable creatures have a kind of soul. So their natural desire for connection is stronger and more intense than what we see in plants, stones, or trees. Among reasonable creatures, we see commonwealths, friendships, families, and public gatherings. Even in their wars, they make agreements and truces. Among creatures of even higher nature — like the stars and planets — though they are far apart from each other by nature, there is still some mutual connection and unity. Excellence has this special quality: it seeks unity. It can create sympathy even between things that are very far apart.

Meditations, Book 9, Section 7 Book 9 · 13 of 60
Human Nature What Matters Most
Marcus Aurelius — The Emperor Original

For though but unreasonable, yet a kind of soul these had, and therefore was that natural desire of union more strong and intense in them, as in creatures of a more excellent nature, than either in plants, or stones, or trees. But among reasonable creatures, begun commonwealths, friendships, families, public meetings, and even in their wars, conventions, and truces. Now among them that were yet of a more excellent nature, as the stars and planets, though by their nature far distant one from another, yet even among them began some mutual correspondency and unity. So proper is it to excellency in a high degree to affect unity, as that even in things so far distant, it could operate unto a mutual sympathy.

Meditations, Book 9, Section 7 Book 9 · 13 of 60
Marcus Aurelius — The Emperor

Whatever is fiery doesn't just rise up because of fire's nature. It's also eager to join with other fire and burn together. Anything that lacks moisture to resist gets set on fire easily. So whatever shares in our common rational nature naturally longs even more for its own kind. The more excellent something is by nature, the more it wants to unite with what shares that nature. Even unreasonable animals quickly form swarms, flocks, and families. They show a kind of mutual love.

Meditations, Book 9, Section 7 Book 9 · 12 of 60
Human Nature
Marcus Aurelius — The Emperor Original

Whatsoever is fiery, doth not only by reason of the elementary fire tend upwards; but here also is so ready to join, and to burn together, that whatsoever doth want sufficient moisture to make resistance, is easily set on fire. Whatsoever therefore is partaker of that reasonable common nature, naturally doth as much and more long after his own kind. For by how much in its own nature it excels all other things, by so much more is it desirous to be joined and united unto that, which is of its own nature. As for unreasonable creatures then, they had not long been, but presently begun among them swarms, and flocks, and broods of young ones, and a kind of mutual love and affection.

Meditations, Book 9, Section 7 Book 9 · 12 of 60
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Ancient philosophy, in plain English.

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